Название: The Kennet and Avon Canal
Автор: Steve Davison
Издательство: Ingram
Жанр: Книги о Путешествиях
isbn: 9781783623570
isbn:
After Cadley Lock (54) and bridge, the canal heads downhill all the way to Bristol and the water that passes through each lock now drains towards the River Avon; prior to this point the water drains towards the River Thames. Continue past a further two locks with bridges to reach another lock (51) and the road bridge (108) at Wootton Rivers. Some 375 metres north along the road is the thatch-roofed Royal Oak pub (01672 810322, accommodation); 1.9km south at Easton Royal is the Bruce Arms pub and campsite (01672 810216).
First recorded in AD804, Wootton Rivers gained part of its name from the de la Rivière family, who held the manor from the early 13th century. In the mid 15th century, the manor was sold to Sir John Seymour of Savernake and then passed through a succession of Seymours and Dukes of Somerset until it was bequeathed to St John’s College, Cambridge, in 1692.
St Andrew’s Church, which dates from the 14th century, has a picturesque wooden steeple and a clock made in 1911 by local man John Spratt to commemorate George V’s coronation. On one face of the clock, the numbers have been replaced with the words ‘Glory be to God’.
The route now follows the longest pound (section between neighbouring locks) of the canal, stretching for 24km (15 miles), so there are no locks all the way to Devizes (Stage 4).
Cross the road and continue along the south side for 4km to reach the fifth bridge (Pains Bridge, 113). Here a gate on the left gives access to Jones’s Mill Nature Reserve (Wiltshire Wildlife Trust). The White Horse Trail crosses here, leading to Pewsey. To visit, head south along the track and along Hollybush Lane; at the mini-roundabout, turn right along the B3087 to the Market Place (1.5km each way).
Jones’s Mill was previously used as a traditional water meadow that was allowed to flood with mineral-rich spring-fed waters during the winter to produce an early growth of grass in the spring. Plants such as yellow iris and great horsetail thrive here as well as rarer plants including bog pimpernel.
To complete the stage, keep ahead for 800 metres to arrive at Pewsey Wharf and the A345. Here there is a car park, bus stop for services between Salisbury and Swindon (except Sundays), and a pub: the Waterfront (01672 564020).
For Pewsey village and railway station
To reach the railway station, turn left following the road (pavement) for 800 metres; before the railway bridge, fork right to the station. For the village, keep ahead along the road for 25 metres and just before the railway bridge turn left along Ways Way for 100 metres. Then turn right along Buckleaze Lane to the A345 and bear left along the A345 for 400 metres to the Market Place (this avoids the narrow section on the A345 under the railway bridge where there is no pavement).
PEWSEY
The history of Pewsey can be traced back to Saxon times, when it was held by Alfred the Great, who became King of Wessex in AD870; in 1913, a statue of Alfred was unveiled in the Market Place to commemorate the Coronation of King George V. In AD940, Alfred’s grandson Edmund granted the royal estate to St Peter’s Abbey in Winchester (later Hyde Abbey) and they held the manor until Henry VIII’s Dissolution of the Monasteries.
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